Definition of Pasquinades. Meaning of Pasquinades. Synonyms of Pasquinades

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Pasquinades. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Pasquinades and, of course, Pasquinades synonyms and on the right images related to the word Pasquinades.

Definition of Pasquinades

Pasquinade
Pasquinade Pas`quin*ade", n. [F. pasquinade, It. pasquinata.] A lampoon or satirical writing. --Macaulay.
Pasquinade
Pasquinade Pas`quin*ade", v. t. To lampoon, to satirize.

Meaning of Pasquinades from wikipedia

- needed] Pasquinades can take a number of literary forms, including song, epigram, and satire. Compared with other kinds of satire, the pasquinade tends...
- government by the writing of satirical poems in broad Roman dialect—called "pasquinades", from the Italian pasquinate—and attaching them to the Pasquino. Thus...
- Lady of Escalot One Thousand and One Nights The Book of Dede Korkut The pasquinades (satirical poems) glued to the Talking Statues of Rome. They still appear...
- by the Polish title, Paskwiliusze na królewskim weselu podrzucone ("Pasquinades Planted at Royal Wedding Celebration"), referring to the wedding of Sigismund...
- other locations in Rome, the statue was returned to the street in 1957. Pasquinadesirreverent satirical inscriptions poking fun at public figures – were...
- performed during the carnival of Venice and other such festivals as well as pasquinades. Both cities' avvisi became more diversified over time, eventually anti****ting...
- Concerning this, an anonymous contemporary Roman satirist quipped in a pasquinade (a publicly posted poem) that quod non fecerunt barbari fecerunt Barberini...
- behind a mask of urbanity. Scabrous verse libels of the type known as pasquinades were particularly abundant during the conclave which followed Leo's death...
- hand-written invectives on the stone blocks used to make the obelisk. These pasquinades read, "We do not want Obelisks and Fountains, it is bread that we want...
- Józef Szujski notes that the literature became "infested with pleonasms, pasquinades and moral sermon". Consequently, regional councils imposed censorship...